A woman recently asked me how she could become a good photographer. I told her I’d let her know how if I ever figure it out for myself. I was joking, but there was truth in it, too.
I have a tortured relationship with photography, just as I do with any kind of creative work. I have a need to create — something which I can’t explain — but I go through predictable cycles. I try to create the beauty or truth that I see in something, and I quickly rage at myself for ever thinking I had the ability to rise to the task.
Then I struggle. I learn more about my equipment. I study different techniques. I experiment and get frustrated with failure. I spend ridiculous amounts of time in Lightroom and Photoshop. After all that work, I finally create a photo that represents a glimmer of what I had hoped to make. I feel exuberant for a few minutes.
And then I notice every little detail that’s imperfect about it — and I’m back to doubting whether I’ll ever be a good photographer.

FRIDAY FUNNIES
If the kids are confused in school, maybe it’s the system and teachers
Visit from his dead parents shook father’s disbelief in supernatural
Money is a tool, and it’s useless without real motivation and vision
For pure ignorance, it’s hard to beat Occupy Wall Street protest signs
If you’re out of place somewhere, nobody’s going to be very happy
Memo to politicians: Coercion isn’t the same thing as ‘investment’
Internet helps blogging 9-year-old change the lousy food at her school
Unless you oppose all coercion, ‘resistance’ claim rings hollow